The steel rebar felt like a giant's fist crushing her chest.
Caryn Rhodes tried to draw a breath, but her lungs wouldn't inflate. There was only a wet, rasping sound in her throat. Dust and the metallic tang of blood filled her mouth.
"Sorry, babe. It's a new world. Survival of the fittest."
Ford, her boyfriend, his voice echoed from somewhere above her, laced with a casual cruelty that was worse than the pain. He knelt, his face appearing in the narrow gap between the concrete slabs that pinned her. He wasn't even dirty. He held up the last bottle of purified water, their last bottle, and twisted the cap.
The sound of it opening was deafening in the ruins of the Portland shelter.
He took a long, slow drink. Water dribbled from the corner of his mouth, and he wiped it away with the back of his clean hand.
"You'd just waste it," he said, his smile not reaching his eyes. He tucked the bottle into his backpack and stood up.
A desperate, animal sound tore from Caryn's throat. She tried to reach for him, to grab the cuff of his jeans. Her fingers twitched, scraping uselessly against the gritty concrete. They wouldn't obey.
He just looked down at her, a brief flicker of something-annoyance, maybe-crossing his face before he turned to leave.
Just as his silhouette began to move away, the world gave a violent shudder. A deep, grinding roar vibrated up through the floor, through the rebar in her chest. The concrete slab above her shifted.
Ford scrambled away without a backward glance.
The last thing Caryn saw was a sliver of gray sky disappearing as the concrete descended. Then, absolute darkness. Absolute silence.
A gasp of frigid air flooded her lungs.
It was so sharp, so clean, it felt like swallowing ice. Her eyes flew open, staring at a smooth, white ceiling. A modern chandelier, its crystals intact and gleaming, hung directly above her.
Confusion, thick and suffocating, choked her.
This wasn't the shelter.
She shot up, the silk comforter pooling around her waist. Her hands flew to the bedsheets, clean and crisp. Her fingers clenched, the fabric soft and real.
Outside, a car horn blared, followed by the distant rumble of traffic. Not the wail of emergency sirens. Not the unnatural silence of a dead city.
A wave of vertigo washed over her. She scrambled out of bed, her bare knees hitting the polished hardwood floor with a solid, painful thud.
The pain was a shock. A glorious, grounding shock.
It was real.
This was real.
She crawled, half-crazed, toward the nightstand. Her hand, trembling violently, closed around her phone. The screen flared to life, the bright light stabbing at her pupils.
She stared at the date.
September 14th.
Her heart didn't just skip a beat. It felt like it stopped completely, then restarted with a painful jolt that echoed in her ears.
One month.
Thirty days before the first quake hit Seattle. Thirty days before the world started to crack apart.
The phone slipped from her numb fingers, clattering onto the floor. Her breath came in ragged, shallow bursts. Instinct, born from five years of starvation and injury, took over. She ripped at the collar of her silk pajamas, her eyes scanning her own stomach.
Where the rebar had pierced her, where the ragged, infected wound had tormented her for weeks, there was only smooth, unblemished skin.
She pushed herself up, using the edge of a vanity table for support. Her legs felt like jelly. She stared at her reflection in the mirror.
The face looking back was hers, but not. It was the face from before. No sunken cheeks, no permanent fear etched into the lines around her eyes. Her hair was clean. Her body was soft, well-fed.
A sob built in her throat, a raw, guttural sound of pure, agonizing relief. She bit down hard on her lower lip, the taste of her own blood a familiar anchor. She would not cry. Not yet.
Just as she regained a sliver of control, her phone vibrated on the floor. The screen lit up with a new message.
From Ford.
Hey, you up? Don't forget we need to get those transfer papers signed today. My dad's getting antsy.
The casual, greedy words were a bucket of ice water on the fragile embers of her relief. The memory of his face, smiling as he left her to die, superimposed itself over the pristine reflection in the mirror.
The house. Her uncle's house. The property she had signed over to him, believing it was for their future, only to be kicked out two weeks later when he sold it for cash. That house had been her first and best chance at a defensible shelter. She had given it away for a lie.
A phantom pain, sharp and brutal, shot through her chest. It was the memory of the rebar, a ghost reminding her of the price of her stupidity.
She took a deep, shuddering breath. Then another. She was an EMT. She knew how to function under pressure. She forced the panic down, locking it away in a cold, dark corner of her mind.
The vulnerability in her eyes vanished, replaced by something arctic. The fear was still there, but it had crystallized into a diamond-hard point of pure, unadulterated rage.
Her gaze swept across the apartment. The designer furniture, the expensive electronics, the closet full of clothes she would never wear again. It wasn't a home. It was capital. Her startup fund for the end of the world.
The thirty-day countdown had already begun, ticking away in her head like a bomb.
She bent down, picked up the phone, and swiped the message from Ford to 'unread'. Let him think she was still sleeping. Let him think she was still his fool.
Caryn turned and walked into her walk-in closet. Her hands moved with purpose, shoving aside flimsy dresses and high heels. She dug into the back, pulling out a pair of durable cargo pants, a thermal undershirt, and a waterproof tactical jacket.
The fabrics were rough against her soft skin, a comforting abrasion. She dressed quickly, her movements efficient and stripped of any hesitation.
The survival protocol was now active.
And her first target was the man who thought he was still her future.
Caryn strode from the walk-in closet directly to the antique vanity her grandmother had given her. She ignored the neatly arranged makeup and perfume bottles, her hands going straight to the bottom drawer.
Inside was a mess of old birthday cards, ticket stubs, and forgotten trinkets. Her fingers dug through the clutter, a frantic edge to her movements. She was searching for the one thing that mattered, the one piece of her past that might secure her future.
There.
Tucked into a worn-out cigar box was a small, tarnished silver locket on a delicate chain. It was Victorian, intricately carved with faded floral patterns. It was the only thing her grandmother had left her from her own mother. In the last life, it had been a comfort, a tangible link to a family she'd lost. Now, she prayed it was something more.
She snatched it up, the metal cool and heavy in her palm. She remembered the stories-a family legend about the locket protecting its wearer. In the last life, during a desperate escape, she had encountered bandits; a sharp blade sliced her neck, blood staining the pendant, and then she entered a strange space.
She had to know. This time, she would not wait until her dying breath to unlock what was rightfully hers.
Her eyes darted around the room, landing on a small pair of eyebrow scissors on the vanity. She reached for them, desperate to activate the locket the way she vaguely remembered from a half-forgotten story-with blood.
In her haste, her hand scraped against a rusty staple on the edge of the old cigar box. A sharp sting, followed by a surprising well of crimson. A single, perfect drop of blood welled up on the tip of her index finger.
Before she could even think, it fell.
The drop landed squarely in the center of the locket's carved surface.
It didn't just sit there. It vanished, absorbed into the silver as if the metal were a sponge. The tarnished surface pulsed with a faint, ethereal blue light. A wave of heat, intense and sudden, radiated from the locket, making her gasp.
The air in the room began to feel thick, distorted, like looking through heat haze. A powerful, silent force tugged at her from within, a feeling like the world's strongest magnet was pulling on her very core.
Her bedroom dissolved into a blur of swirling colors.
The sensation of falling, weightless and disoriented, lasted only a second. Then her feet hit solid ground with a soft thud.
The sudden silence was absolute.
Caryn opened her eyes. She was standing on a smooth, gray floor that stretched out in every direction into a misty, undefined horizon. There were no walls, no ceiling, just an endless expanse of neutral gray under a soft, sourceless light. The air was clean, still, and a perfect, neutral temperature.
It was real. The legend was real.
A choked, hysterical laugh escaped her lips. She dropped to her knees, her hands pressing flat against the solid floor. It was real. This was her secret weapon. Her ark. In the last life she had stumbled through the apocalypse with nothing but the clothes on her back and a locket she didn't know how to use. Now, she had thirty days and a space where time itself stood still. The contrast was so sharp it left her breathless.
She focused on the memory of her bedroom, on the scent of her perfume and the feel of the plush rug under her nightstand. The pulling sensation returned, and in the blink of an eye, she was back, standing in front of her vanity. The locket in her hand was warm to the touch, its surface now gleaming as if freshly polished.
Her heart hammered against her ribs. She had to test it.
Her eyes landed on the heavy, oversized makeup case on her vanity-a monstrosity filled with dozens of palettes and brushes, easily weighing twenty pounds. She wrapped her hand around its handle, the locket still clutched in her other fist, and thought, In.
The case vanished from her grasp. Her hand was suddenly holding nothing but air.
She took a shaky breath and thought, Out.
The case reappeared in her hand with a solid, reassuring weight, exactly as it had been.
A wild, triumphant grin spread across her face. She glanced at the digital clock on her nightstand. The numbers hadn't changed. Not a single second had passed.
Time was frozen inside the space.
The implications of that discovery hit her with the force of a physical blow. Hot food would stay hot forever. Fresh produce would never rot. Medicine would never expire.
The gnawing, soul-deep terror of starvation that had been her constant companion for five years began to recede, replaced by a surge of intoxicating power. This space wasn't just for storage. It was a guarantee. A promise of life.
Her brain, now clear of panic, kicked into high gear. She needed to fill this space. She needed money. A lot of it. And she needed to get out of Seattle, out of this city destined to be the epicenter of the first great disaster. She needed to get to her grandparents in Portland.
Caryn walked back to the closet and pulled out a large, black duffel bag. She moved with a new, decisive energy, throwing in her passport, her birth certificate, a stash of emergency cash she kept hidden, and a few changes of practical clothing. Everything else was disposable.
She zipped the bag shut and walked to the window, pulling aside the blinds. Below, the city was waking up. People were jogging, walking their dogs, lining up at coffee shops. They were living in a world that had thirty days left on its lease. They had no idea the ground beneath their feet was a ticking time bomb.
A coldness settled over her. She felt no pity. No desire to be a savior. She couldn't save them all. She had died once trying to help others. Never again.
This time, she would save her grandparents. She would save herself.
And she would make Ford Nichols, and his manipulative father, pay for the privilege of funding her survival.
She let the blinds fall, plunging the room back into shadow. The world outside, with its false peace and oblivious citizens, no longer concerned her.
Her new world was just beginning.
Caryn dropped the duffel bag onto the sofa, the heavy thud echoing in the quiet living room. She scanned the space-the chic, minimalist furniture Ford had helped her pick out, the abstract art he'd said made her look sophisticated. It all felt like a stage set for a life that was never hers. A lie she had paid for.
She pulled out her phone and dialed a number from memory.
"Davis residence."
"Mrs. Davis, it's Caryn Rhodes from 3B." Her voice was tight, strained, deliberately pitched to sound like someone in the middle of a crisis. "I'm so sorry to do this, but there's been a family emergency. A bad one. I have to leave the city. Today."
There was a surprised silence on the other end. "Oh, my dear. Is everything alright?"
"No," Caryn said, letting a tremor enter her voice. "It's not. I need to terminate my lease immediately. I know it's short notice. You can keep the security deposit. Both months of it. Just... I need to be gone."
The shift in Mrs. Davis's tone was immediate. The concern was still there, but it was now layered with the practical consideration of a landlord being offered free money. "Well, that's highly unusual, but given the circumstances... If you're sure, Caryn. I can email you the termination forms."
"Thank you," Caryn breathed, relief flooding her voice. "You have no idea what this means to me."
She hung up, a cold, humorless smile touching her lips. Two thousand dollars. In a month, that much money wouldn't buy a single roll of toilet paper.
As if on cue, her phone screen lit up, vibrating violently against the glass coffee table. Ford.
She watched it buzz, the name flashing like a warning light. She let it go to voicemail. He'd be confused, then annoyed. He was a creature of habit and control. Her silence was a disruption he wouldn't tolerate.
She counted to three in her head. A new call came in, from a different number.
Harrison Nichols.
The old fox himself. Ford was the lure, but Harrison was the hunter.
Caryn cleared her throat, took a deep breath, and composed her features into a mask of soft vulnerability. She answered on the third ring.
"Hello?" Her voice was small, hesitant.
"Caryn, my dear. It's Harrison. Ford said he couldn't reach you. Is everything alright? He's worried sick." The lie was so smooth, so practiced. His voice was a warm, paternal blanket designed to smother suspicion.
"Oh, Mr. Nichols. I'm so sorry. I... I've just been feeling a little overwhelmed." She let her voice crack just enough.
"Overwhelmed? About what? The wedding? Or is it the house?" He went straight for the kill.
This was her opening. "It's the house," she whispered, as if confessing a shameful secret. "It was my uncle's. It's just... it's the last piece of family I have here. Signing it over feels so... final. I know it's silly."
"Not silly at all," Harrison said, his voice oozing synthetic empathy. "It's completely understandable. This is a big step. Look, why don't you let us put your mind at ease? Come over for dinner tonight. Susan is making her famous pot roast. We can talk everything through, no pressure."
The invitation hung in the air, a perfectly baited hook. A pot roast in exchange for a million-dollar property. The arrogance was breathtaking.
A wave of nausea rolled through her stomach, but she forced it down. "I... I guess that would be okay," she said, her voice filled with the manufactured gratitude of a mouse accepting an invitation from a cat.
"Wonderful. We'll see you at seven."
The line went dead. Caryn tossed the phone onto the sofa. Her face, which had been a portrait of fragile uncertainty, hardened into stone. The hunt was on.
She walked to the hall mirror. The tactical jacket and cargo pants were too aggressive. They screamed competence, not crisis. She couldn't afford for them to sense the change in her. Not yet.
She went back to the bedroom and pulled on a pair of simple jeans and a soft, cream-colored knit sweater. It was unassuming, comfortable, the kind of thing a girl-next-door would wear. She applied a touch of makeup, just enough to look pale and tired, adding faint shadows under her eyes. She was crafting a costume: the perfect victim.
Before leaving, she retrieved a small, wickedly sharp tactical folding knife from her emergency kit. She clicked it open and closed a few times, the sound a quiet promise to herself. She slipped it into the top of her leather boot, where it sat invisibly against her ankle. Just in case.
She grabbed her keys and the duffel bag, took one last look at the apartment, and closed the door behind her without a shred of sentimentality.
Down in the concrete silence of the underground garage, she threw the bag in the back of her old SUV. The engine turned over with a familiar rumble. She pulled out into the evening traffic of Seattle, a river of steel and headlights flowing toward a cliff no one else could see.
She didn't turn on the radio. The only sound was the hum of the tires on the pavement and the intricate, silent machinations of the revenge plot unfolding in her mind.
An hour later, she turned onto the manicured streets of a wealthy suburb. The houses grew larger, set further back from the road behind wrought-iron fences. She pulled up before the Nichols' sprawling two-story villa.
She killed the engine and stared at the heavy, carved wooden door. She remembered standing on that same porch a year ago, Ford's arm around her, feeling like she'd finally found a family. She remembered being shoved out that same door in another life, with nothing but the clothes on her back.
The humiliation was a ghost, breathing cold air on the back of her neck.
She took a deep breath, pushing the hatred down, burying it deep beneath the soft knit of her sweater. She arranged her face into a picture of nervous hesitation.
She got out of the car. The cool evening air brushed against her skin. She hugged her arms to her chest, a perfect imitation of a woman feeling small and uncertain.
She walked up the stone path, her steps deliberately slow.
She reached the door and pressed the bell.
Through the frosted glass, she could see a figure approaching. A faint, predatory smile touched her lips, gone as quickly as it appeared.
The hunter was at the door of the den. And the wolves had no idea she was the one with the teeth.